Archive for the ‘Cthulhu’ Category

Flickr Friday: Dragon*Con 2009—Vicarious Edition

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Dragon*Con has been over for nearly a week, which is plenty of time for the Internet to help me find all (well, nearly) the cephalopod-themed costumes from this year’s menagerie of the weird. Enjoy.

Davy Jones by vladeb

photo by vladeb

Davy Jones ( Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest) from the Dragon*Con parade.

photo by Hueyatl

photo by Hueyatl

Netherworld squid monster.

Ursula the Sea Witch by sarberry

photo by sarberry

Ursula the Sea Witch from Disney’s The Little Mermaid.

Serenity Fruit Oaty Bar Girls by Clockwork_Dandy

photo by Clockwork_Dandy

The Fruity Oaty Bar commercial from Joss Whedon’s Serenity come to life!

Stephen Le Podd con exclusives by TheKingInYellow

photo by TheKingInYellow

MINDstyle’s “Stephen Le Podd” con exclusives.

photo by Sarcasm-hime

photo by Sarcasm-hime

Cthulhu bustle!

photo by sudrin

photo by sudrin

Victorian cecaelia!

photo by Petrona09

photo by Petrona09

It’s this guy! He’s back!

Flickr Friday: Dragon*Con Edition

Friday, September 4th, 2009

Like I said yesterday, Dragon*Con is this weekend, and I am rather bummed not to be in attendance this year. The con is more than just a science-fiction or comic book convention, it is a chaotic multi-media/multi-genre extravaganza celebrating every corner of geeky popular culture. Here is but a small tentacled taste of Dragon*Con from the past few years. All photos are from my Flickr account, unless otherwise noted.

Doctor Octopus (Dragon*Con 2008)

Doctor Octopus (Dragon*Con 2008)

Stygian Depths booth (Dragon*Con 2008)

Stygian Depths booth (Dragon*Con 2008)

Doctor Cthulhu (Dragon*Con 2008)

"Doctor Cthulhu" (Dragon*Con 2008)

Photo by Foenix

Cthulhu and Ichigo (Dragon*Con 2007)

Cthulhu and Ichigo (Dragon*Con 2007)

Photo by Futuregirl_LeahRiley

tentacle monster (Dragon*Con 2005)

"tentacle monster" (Dragon*Con 2005)

Cthulhu Week: “My Little Chtulhu” by Mari Kasurinen

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

For our final Cthulhu Week post, we have an amazing My Little Pony mod by Finnish artist Mari Kasurinen. Check her out on deviantArt for more fabulous custom ponies. (Via io9)

Cthulhu Week: Toy Vault™—eldrich yet cuddly

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Nyarlathotep, Cthulhu, baby Shoggoth

Lovecraft’s Mythos has never been warmer and fuzzier than Toy Vault’s plush Cthulhu line.  Since the line debuted in 2000, they have produced a wide variety of stuffed Lovecraftian monstrosities, including several variations of the Big C himself. Quite a few are out of print (such as the Nyarlathotep and Shoggoth shown above), but I imagine most of them can be found online if one looks hard enough.

Incidentally, a Toy Vault Cthulhu hand puppet is the star of the video podcast Calls For Cthulhu.

Toy Vault also made this vinyl Cthulhu figure (shown here with some of his favorite books), but it too is no longer in production.

Cthulhu Week/Flickr Friday: R’lyeh is for lovers!

Friday, August 21st, 2009

R’lyeh is for lovers!, originally uploaded by jvsquare.

Here’s a close up of the R’lyeh “Other World” space on the core Arkham Horror game board. The heart is an Arkham stamina token. The Cthulhu figurine is from a different game—Unspeakable Words by Playroom Entertainment.

Cthulhu Week: BoingBoing LOVES Cthulhu

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Cthulhu clearly holds a special place in the hearts of the editors at BoingBoing.netCory Doctorow in particular. Here is a selection of Cory’s recent(ish) posts featuring everyone’s favorite Great Old One:

Cthapitol T-shirt by Fo’ Paw Productions.

Hand-knit Cthulhu ski mask

Leather Cthulhu mask by Ukranian artist Bob Basset.

Cthulhu cake!

Cthulhu Week: Happy birthday H.P. Lovecraft!

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

Born in Providence, Rhode Island on August 20, 1890, Howard Philips Lovecraft would come to be considered one of the most influential American horror authors of the 20th century

He is best known for the creation of what has become known as the Cthulhu Mythos, a series of stories and novels that feature a pantheon of cosmic entities so horrible and incomprehensible to the human mind that the mere knowledge of their existence is enough to drive a person insane. These tales of cosmic horror were often set in his native New England, and they featured a number of memorable fictitious Massachusetts towns such as Arkham (home of the equally fictitious Miskatonic University), Innsmouth, and Dunwich. Lovecraft also created the concept of the Necronomicon—an ancient book containing secret knowledge pertaining to these Great Old Ones.

Other authors, such as Lovecraft’s friend and publisher August Derleth, would go on to write their own stories of the Mythos, elaborating and expanding on the themes, settings, and mythology of Lovecraft’s bleak and fascinating universe.

Lovecraft died in 1937 of intestinal cancer. He was 46.

Lovecrafts original sketch of Cthulhu

Lovecraft's original sketch of Cthulhu

I came across the above image on the Ectoplasmosis! blog. They do a regular feature with the fiendishly clever name Cthulhu Cthursday (a name I wish I had come up with!). I wonder what Lovecraft would have thought if someone had told him that his work would be so revered and influential (as well as controversial) 119 years after his birth?

Cthulhu Week: Arkham Horror by Fantasy Flight Games

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Remember board games like Monopoly, Clue, and Candy Land? Arkham Horror is nothing like those games. In fact, Arkham Horror leaves those games quivering in the corner, gibbering incoherently at mind-shredding visions of extra-dimensional terror. Also there are tentacles.

Published by Fantasy Flight Games, the epic board game specialists, Arkham Horror is based on the works of H.P. Lovecraft and the extended Mythos he created. It’s the 1920’s, and the university town of Arkham, Massachusetts (as wall as the neighboring communities of Dunwich, Innsmouth, and Kingsport) is beset by cosmic forces that are determined to rip through the thin boundary between our world and any number of strange and terrible outer realms. The goal of these Ancient Ones, as you might imagine, is to devour all of humanity. In this cooperative game, the players are all investigators working together to find clues, fight monsters, and arm themselves against the teeming servants of these ancient gods. With a little skill and no small amount of luck, they just might succeed in preventing the awakening of such horrific beings as Nyarlathotep, Azathoth, Yog-Sothoth, and even Cthulhu himself.

Arkham is a sprawling game with hundreds of bits, and rather complicated rules. It blurs the line between board game and role playing game (in fact, it is based on the Call of Cthulhu RPG). You select a character representing one of many period archetypes—the reporter, the professor, the private eye, etc.—, and each has a special ability, a range of skill points, and stamina and sanity points that represent their physical and mental well being. You can obtain weapons both mundane and magical, spells, artifacts, and allies to help you the other investigators survive the dangers that lurk around every corner.

All you need to play is the core game (recently back in print!), but there are, at present, six expansions (the two most recent, Black Goat of the Woods, and Innsmouth Horror, are not pictured above) which add new cards, characters, monsters, board segments, and rules variations.

You can pick up Arkham Horror at your Friendly Local Game Store, or, barring that, the game and all expansions are currently available for purchase at www.fantasyflightgames.com.

Cthulhu Week/T-shirt Tuesday: “cephaloPod” by OffWorld Designs

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

I am generally not a fan of puns. But when I saw this shirt at the OffWorld Designs booth at Dragon*Con a few years ago, I just had to get it. In case it’s not clear what’s going one here, Cthulhu, in silhouette, is getting his groove on while listening to a familiar-looking white mp3 player. The caption reads:

“Welcome to the digital magic revolution. 7,500 blasphemies in your pocket. Works with sanity or without. Over six billion doomed. The new cephaloPod.”

Yes, I realize that shirt is a play on an ad campaign that is becoming less relevant with each passing year, but it still makes me laugh. Plus the click wheel of the iPod cephaloPod has a little Elder Sign on it!

“cephaloPod” was designed by Aaron Williams, and you can buy it from OffWorld Designs ($20 USD). You can probably also find it at a science fiction convention near you.

OffWorld Designs has a number of other Cthulhu-themed t-shirts including:

“Horton Hears Cthulhu”

“Miskatonic Mouse Club”

“My Little Cthulhu”

Cthulhu Week begins!

Monday, August 17th, 2009
Cthulhu fhtagn!

Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn!

Rising from the non-Euclidian halls of sunken R’lyeh comes a week dedicated to our favorite cosmic squid god. The green, sticky spawn of the stars. The being so freaking eldrich that they named an entire Mythos after him. The Ayatollah of Rock ‘n Rolla. The Dread Cthuhlu.

Cthulhu (typically pronounced kə-THOO-loo) was created by H.P. Lovecraft and first appeared in the short story “The Call of Cthulhu,” originally published in 1928 in the pulp magazine Weird Tales. Cthulhu is a member of a race of extraterrestrial beings of immense size and power called the Great Old Ones, who are worshiped as deities by various human cults. The Cult of Cthulhu waits for the day when their terrible god will awaken from his slumber beneath the sea and rise to consume the world. He likes long walks on the beach, candlelit dinners, and devouring your immortal soul.

Learn more about Cthulhu on Wikipedia

“That is not dead that can eternal lie.

And with strange aeons even death may die.”

-Abdul Alhazred, the Necronomicon